Category: FOREIGN

Foreign Blogs is a network of global affairs blogs and a supplement to the Foreign Policy Association’s Great Decisions program.

  • What is the Kolkata doctor rape case and why are Indians protesting?

    What is the Kolkata doctor rape case and why are Indians protesting?

    The rape and murder of a female doctor has sparked protests and clashes all over India. Protestors, mostly women, are enraged by the growing number of crimes against women in the country.

    Here is the timeline of this high-profile murder case:

    Doctor Moumita Debanath, 31, a postgraduate trainee at a local Kolkata hospital, was raped and murdered on the night of August 8. Her bruised body was found inside the seminar hall of the hospital.

    Local police told her family that the death was caused by suicide on August 9. As the family came to collect the body, they were denied access. When they eventually did get to her remains, they found the body unclothed.

    Autopsy details reveal that the Moumita was raped and brutally tortured with 14 major injuries. The cause of death was manual strangulation. The report also highlights that the body had clear signs of sexual assault, most prominently her pelvic girdle being severely damaged due to forceful penetration.

    The police used CCTV footage to arrest the suspect, identified as Sanjay Roy, a civic assistant who was placed in police custody on remand until August 23.

    Doctors and civil society initiated protests, asking the authorities to take action. Meanwhile, the doctor’s family expressed their distrust of the State police. They met Mamta Banerjee, the Chief Minister of West Bengal, who assured them of the urgency of concluding the investigation.

    On August 11, the government transferred the superintendent of the hospital in Kolkota over reported lapses leading to the horrific rape and murder.

    On August 12, the principal of the hospital stepped down from his post. Subsequently, the Federation of Resident Doctors Association (FORDA) announced a nationwide halt to elective services. Protests escalated all around the country, with women chanting “Reclaim the Night” in the protests. They were joined by a large number online as the templates of justice for the victim and the growing number of cases of violence against women in the country were widely shared.

    The incident made waves internationally when a mob of unidentified men vandalised the hospital’s emergency department on the night of August 15. Media reports claim that the mob comprised of around 7,000 people. They attacked the crime scene in the hospital, smashed the CCTV camera and damaged public property. The mob also clashed with the protesting women echoing the demand of reclaiming the night. Eye-witnesses claim that the whole attack was backed by the government.

    The Kolkata High Court also criticised Mamta’s government for its failure to control the situation.

    Only 19 individuals involved in the mob have been arrested until now.

    Other medical associations also announced nationwide withdrawal as a sign of protest, prompting Prime Minister Narendra Modi to address the matter in the Independence Day speech: “An immediate investigation and strict punishment against those who commit such monstrous crimes against women is important to instil confidence in society.”

    Against the backdrop of a huge number of crimes against female doctors and paramedic staff Indian Medical Association sought PM Modi’s “intervention” in the Kolkata doctor rape case.

    Victim Dr Moumita’s family was recently interviewed by NDTV India, in which her father expressed her disappointment over the investigation so far. “Early on I had full faith in her (Mamata Banerjee), but now no. She is asking for justice but what is she saying that for? She can take charge of that, she is doing nothing,” he said.

    The victim’s aunt shared how she was about to get married, and all she wanted was to get a gold medal.

    Big fish theory

    Additionally, Indian media recently coined the “big fish theory” regarding the case. Mint India reported that friends of the victim have revealed that she was under immense pressure of working for long hours.

    One of her colleagues asked how the accused, Sanjay Roy, got to know of the victim’s presence in the seminar hall. “Roy could be a part of a plot hatched by a big fish. She was targeted. How did the civic volunteer know she was alone in the seminar hall at that time?” the colleague said.

    Another colleague claimed the victim was trying to expose the possible drug siphoning racket in her department. “She might have known too much about something,” he said.

    The media also reported that her family shared that she was not happy at her job, yet nothing is confirmed, and the investigation is underway.

    However, protests have erupted all over the country, reminding journalists of protests after the 2012 Delhi gang-rape case when a 22-year-old Nirbhaya was gang raped in a bus in Delhi. Her mother, Asha Devi, talked to AlJazeera and said, “Whenever such an incident happens, people start bringing up Nirbhaya. But what have we learnt from the Nirbhaya incident and the movement that followed in her support? What changes were brought to our legal system? And what actions have we taken after the laws were amended after the Nirbhaya incident? We are still living in 2012.”

    Supreme Court of India has taken a sou motu of the Kolkata rape case and the hearing is to be held on August 20.

  • Iranian women shot, paralysed for defying hijab rules

    Iranian women shot, paralysed for defying hijab rules

    The Iranian police have shot Arezoo Badri over allegedly violating country’s hijab rules.

    ‘’She is paralysed from the waist down and doctors have said it will take months to determine whether she will be permanently paraplegic or not’’, said a BBC source

    Mother of two, Badri was heading home with her sister when the police stopped her car to check whether she was complying with the hijab law. When the car did not stop, the police first shot the tires and then opened fire, targeting the driver’s side, according to the state-run news agency in Iran.

    ‘’The bullet entered her lung and severely damaged her spinal cord and the bullet was only removed after 10 days’’, the source said

    Both police and BBC sources confirm that the car window was tinted.

  • Bangladesh court opens murder case against ex-premier Sheikh Hasina

    Bangladesh court opens murder case against ex-premier Sheikh Hasina

    A court in Bangladesh opened Tuesday a murder investigation into ousted ex-premier Sheikh Hasina and six top figures in her administration over the police killing of a man during civil unrest last month.

    A week ago, Hasina, 76, fled by helicopter to neighbouring India as protesters flooded Dhaka’s streets in a dramatic end to her iron-fisted tenure.

    “A case has been filed against Sheikh Hasina and six more,” said Mamun Mia, a lawyer who brought the case on behalf of a private citizen.

    He added that the Dhaka Metropolitan Court had ordered police to accept “the murder case against the accused persons”, the first step in a criminal investigation under Bangladeshi law.

    Mia’s filing with the court also named Asaduzzaman Khan, Hasina’s former home minister, and Obaidul Quader, the general secretary of Hasina’s Awami League party.

    In addition, it named four top police officers appointed by Hasina’s government who have since vacated their posts, including former police inspector general Chowdhury Abdullah Al-Mamun.

    It also named detective branch chief Harun-or-Rashid and senior Dhaka Metropolitan Police officers Habibur Rahman and Biplob Kumar Sarker.

    Police take control of Dhaka streets

     Bangladeshi police resumed patrols of the capital, Dhaka, on Monday, ending a weeklong strike that had created a law and order vacuum caused by recent uprisings.

    Officers vanished from the streets of the sprawling megacity of 20 million people last week after Hasina’s resignation and flight abroad ended her 15-year rule.

    Police were loathed for spearheading a lethal crackdown on the weeks of protests that forced her departure, with 42 officers among the more than 450 people killed.

    They had vowed not to resume work until their safety on duty was guaranteed but agreed to return after late-night talks with the new interim government, helmed by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus.

    “It’s good to be back,” Assistant Commissioner Snehasish Das told AFP while directing traffic at a busy intersection. “As we feel secure now, we are back on duty.”

    Student-led protests against Hasina’s government had been largely peaceful until police attempted to disperse them violently. Yunus told reporters that Bangladesh was experiencing a “revolution” after Hasina’s ouster after ” the whole government’s business collapsed”.

    He said he had been instructed by the protests’ student leaders to take office, adding he told them, “Because you ordered me to do this, I take your order.”

    Several top Hasina allies, including the chief justice and the central bank governor, stepped down after students issued them ultimatums to quit their offices.

    However, Yunus said their resignations had been conducted legally.

    “I’m sure they will find the legal way to justify all of this because legally… all the steps were followed,” he said at a late-night briefing on Sunday.

    Around 450 of the country’s 600 police stations were targeted in arson and vandalism attacks over the past month, according to the national police union.

    In the police’s absence, the students who led the protests that toppled Hasina volunteered to restore law and order after looting and reprisal attacks in the hours following her departure.

    They acted as traffic wardens, formed overnight neighbourhood watch patrols and guarded Hindu temples and other places of worship, quickly settling the unrest.

    Arrests in India

    India has arrested nearly a dozen Bangladeshis attempting to cross the border to escape violence and political tumult following deadly protests that led to the ouster of Sheikh Hasina, border officials said on Monday.

    Hundreds more are waiting along the frontier pleading for permission to cross, India’s Border Security Force (BSF) said.

    BSF said 11 Bangladesh nationals had been arrested since Sunday trying to “sneak” across the frontier into West Bengal state. “Several hundred Bangladeshi nationals are still waiting in no-man’s land to cross over the border,” BSF deputy inspector general Amit Kumar Tyagi said.

  • Trump holds meandering live ‘chat’ with backer Musk, after delay

    Trump holds meandering live ‘chat’ with backer Musk, after delay

    Donald Trump ran through his checklist of conspiracy theories Monday in a rambling conversation with his uber-wealthy supporter Elon Musk that was initially derailed by what the tech titan said was a technical glitch.

    In a very one-sided conversation on X, Trump vented about a “zombie apocalypse” of immigration, repeatedly blasted President Joe Biden as “stupid”, and mused about developing a new missile defense system based on the one that defends Israel.

    The Republican standard-bearer also dismissed climate change, whose sea-level rises he said would simply create more real estate opportunities.

    “The biggest threat is not global warming, where the ocean is going to rise one-eighth of an inch over the next 400 years,” he told Musk.

    “You’ll have more ocean front property, right? The biggest threat is not that. The biggest threat is nuclear warming, because we have five countries now that have significant nuclear power, and we have to not allow anything to happen with stupid people like Biden.”

    What was billed as a “no limits” conversation between the two started more than half an hour late, with many of those logging on unable to listen in live.

    Musk, the world’s richest man according to Forbes, claimed the platform formerly known as Twitter had experienced a cyber “attack.”

    Read more: ‘I am very happy that Twitter is now in sane hands’: Trump welcomes Musk’s takeover

    Border ‘apocalypse’

    The conversation was intended to help reinvigorate Trump’s stuttering campaign, which has flagged since Biden dropped out of the race, to be replaced by a surging Kamala Harris.

    The young men who view Musk as a hero are a prized target for Trump, whose following tends to skew older.

    More than a million users listened in live to the conversation on X. Musk, who has said he previously voted Democrat, has thrown his weight — and his wealth — behind Trump since a gunman tried to assassinate the Republican at a rally last month.

    The apparent technical difficulties come after Musk fired swathes of staff at the platform, and also served as an uncomfortable reminder that the Tesla boss had once backed Trump’s rival Ron DeSantis, whose campaign launch on the platform was also beset by problems.

    When things finally got under way, Musk said the “massive attack illustrates there’s a lot of opposition to people just hearing what President Trump has to say.”

    Trump was banned from Twitter after a mob of his supporters stormed the US Capitol in January 2021, but Musk reinstated him when he took the platform over and renamed it.

    The South African-born billionaire has emerged as a major voice in US politics, but is accused of turning X into a megaphone for right-wing conspiracy theories.

    He is one of the Democrats’ fiercest critics, leveraging his 194 million-strong following on X to assail liberal efforts to boost diversity and inclusion — what he calls the “woke mind virus” — and the White House’s handling of the southern border.

    “We have people streaming over,” Musk told Trump, likening the border to the “zombie apocalypse” depicted in the film “World War Z.”

    “It’s just not possible for the United States to absorb, you know, everyone from Earth,” said Musk, identifying himself as a “legal immigrant.”

    Read more: Elon Musk restores Donald Trump’s Twitter account

    Cost ‘cutter’

    In his “chat” with Musk, Trump returned often to a favorite theme — boasting about his relationship with autocrats like Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping, and insisted America would be safer under his stewardship.

    “One of the things we’re going to do is we’re going to build an Iron Dome,” he said, referring to Israel’s missile defense system.

    “We’re going to have the best Iron Dome in the world… because it just takes one maniac to, you know, start something.” Musk reiterated his strong support for Trump, saying the ex-president “was the path to prosperity and Kamala is the opposite.”

    At one point he also appeared to be touting for a job under a future Trump administration, suggesting he would like to serve on a cost-cutting committee.

    “I think it would be great to just have a government efficiency commission that takes a look at these things and just ensures that taxpayer money… is spent in a good way,” he said. “I’d be happy to help out on such a commission.” Trump appeared sold on the job application.

    “You’re the greatest cutter,” he told the man who slashed swathes of staff months after taking over Twitter.

  • Defiance in Hijab: Olympian Sifan covers head to receive gold medal

    Defiance in Hijab: Olympian Sifan covers head to receive gold medal

    Marathon gold medalist Sifan Hassan, a Dutch of Ethiopian descent, accepted her Olympic gold medal wearing a hijab.

    It was Sifan’s third medal in Paris. She was competing in the 5,000m, the 10,000m and the marathon – the last two events just two days apart.

    On Friday, Hassan took bronze in the 10,000m in the Stade de France after coming away with a bronze in the 5,000m.

    “It was not easy,” said Hassan, 31. “It was so hot, but I was feeling OK. I’ve never pushed myself through to the finish line as I did today,” Sifan said.

    France has been criticised during the Olympics for prohibiting athletes from wearing hijab while competing.

    Athletes from other countries, like Egypt, have worn hijabs while playing. For several years, apparel makers have designed hijabs that function well for competition, which has eliminated one argument that had been used by some detractors.

    Hassan’s presence at the ceremony was not a direct reaction to the French rule, but it is a reminder of a position taken by France that has been widely criticised.

  • Helicopter crashes into hotel roof in Australia

    Helicopter crashes into hotel roof in Australia

    A helicopter crashed into the roof of a Hilton hotel in northeastern Australia on Monday, police said, igniting a blaze atop the building and forcing a mass evacuation.

    Mangled pieces of the helicopter’s propeller landed in the hotel’s pool, said an emergency services official, adding that one man was treated at the scene with life-threatening injuries.

    Hundreds of patrons were evacuated from the DoubleTree by Hilton in the tropical northern city of Cairns after the helicopter crashed around 1:50 a.m. local time.

    Images showed a bright plume of fire blazing on the hotel’s roof.

    “They just flew into that building,” a female voice says in a video shared on social media that captured the aftermath as sirens blared in the background.

    “Madness, man. Shivers. People were living in that. It smashed right in.”

    Queensland Ambulance supervisor Caitlin Denning said the aircraft’s propellers had “dislodged”.

    “One landed on the Cairns Esplanade and there was a second propeller located in the hotel pool on the bottom floor and it was on fire,” she told local media.

    Queensland police said “there were no injuries sustained by people on the ground”.

    Cairns is a popular tourist hub that offers a gateway to Australia’s famed Great Barrier Reef.

    A team of government investigators from the Australian Transport Safety Bureau have been dispatched to the crash site.

  • Bangladesh Chief Justice resigns after students’ ultimatum

    Bangladesh Chief Justice resigns after students’ ultimatum

    Following pressure from Bangladeshi student protesters, the Chief Justice of Bangladesh, Obaidul Hasan, has decided to resign “in principle.”

    Local media reports that hundreds of protesters surrounded the Supreme Court in Dhaka and gave Chief Justice Obaidul Hasan a one-hour ultimatum to resign.

    The protesters had announced that they would storm the judges’ residences if they did not resign.

    Justice Obaidul Hasan will submit his resignation after consulting the President this evening.

    He called for a full court meeting with the judges of both divisions.

    On the other hand, Bloomberg’s report states that Bangladesh Bank Governor Abdul Rauf resigned from his position yesterday. However, he resigned for personal reasons.

  • Hometown of Imane Khelif erupts in joy after Olympic win

    Hometown of Imane Khelif erupts in joy after Olympic win

    The poor, rural hometown of Algerian boxer Imane Khelif erupted in joy on Friday as she won gold at the Paris Olympics in the face of a major gender controversy.

    Cheers of Khelif’s name and the country’s famous chant “one two three, viva l’Algerie” broke out in Biban Mesbah, a town of around 6,000 people.

    “It’s Algeria’s victory,” her father, Omar Khelif, told reporters as he watched the fight on a giant screen along with the rest of the village around 300 kilometers (185 miles) southwest of Algiers.

    Villagers fired shots into the air in honour of 25-year-old Khelif’s first Olympic medal following her victory over China’s Yang Liu in the women’s 66kg final.

    Imane after winning a Gold medal

    The jubilation also spread to the capital Algiers, where crowds invaded the city center, celebrating the victory with fireworks and a chorus of car horns.

    Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune joined the celebrations on social media site X, saying: “We are all proud of you, Olympic champion Imane, your victory today is Algeria’s victory and your gold is Algeria’s gold.”

    Ahead of Khelif’s fight, hundreds of volunteers turned out in Biban Mesbah to help prepare for the big night.

    Despite scorching temperatures of 46 degrees Celsius (114 degrees Fahrenheit), the men carried out a vast clean-up operation while dozens of women were busy cooking a giant couscous.

    “We agreed to give the village a new face and breathe new life into it, with the victory of Imane Khelif,” her cousin Mounir Khelif, 36, told AFP.

    “We all helped each other, some bringing couscous, others oil and vegetables, while those who couldn’t help with provisions helped with the preparation,” said Amina Saadi, 52, a mother of six.

    “We are all united behind Imane Khelif, who has honored Algeria, that’s the least we can offer her,” she said.

    The boxer has been the victim of a social media hate campaign that portrays her as a “man fighting women.”

    “I’m a strong woman with special powers. From the ring, I sent a message to those who were against me,” she said Friday after her win.

    The gender controversy ignited in the French capital when Khelif defeated Angela Carini in 46 seconds in her opening bout, the Italian reduced to tears and abandoning the fight after suffering a badly hurt nose.

    Algerians from all walks of life have showed their solidarity with Khelif, irritated that her father was forced to show her birth certificate to journalists to prove she was born a girl.

    Amar, father of Algerian boxer Imane Khelif, gestures during an interview with Reuters outside his house, in Tiaret province, Algeria, on Friday. – REUTERS PIC

    Khelif’s international career took off with her participation at the Covid-delayed Tokyo Olympics in 2021, where she finished fifth in her weight class.

    In 2023, she made it to the semifinals of the world championships in New Delhi.

    But then she was disqualified following gender eligibility testing by the International Boxing Association, which is not recognized by the International Olympic Committee and is not running the sport in Paris.

    From a family of limited means, she spoke before the Games of the difficulty of her life in “a village of conservative people” in semi-desert surroundings.
    Imane said that her father initially found it difficult to accept her boxing.

    Imane’s family

    “I came from a conservative family. Boxing is not a widely practiced sport by women, especially in Algeria,” she told Canal Algerie a month before the Games, smiling readily and her voice soft.

    In an interview with UNICEF, she said she used to sell scrap metal and her mother sold homemade couscous to pay for bus tickets to a nearby town.

  • Passenger plane crash in Brazil kills all 61 on board

    Passenger plane crash in Brazil kills all 61 on board

    An airplane carrying 57 passengers and four crew crashed Friday in Brazil’s Sao Paulo state, killing everyone on board, the airline said.

    The aircraft, an ATR 72-500 operated by Voepass airline, was traveling from Cascavel in southern Parana state to Sao Paulo’s Guarulhos international airport when it crashed in the city of Vinhedo.

    Voepass initially said the plane was carrying 58 passengers, but a statement on the airline’s website later revised the figure to 57.

    Images broadcast on local media showed a large plane spinning as it plummeted almost vertically, while other footage showed a large column of smoke rising from the crash site in what appeared to be a residential area.

    “There were no survivors,” the city government in Valinhos — which was involved in the rescue and recovery operation in nearby Vinhedo — said in an to AFP.

    Vinhedo, with about 76,000 residents, is located approximately 80 kilometers (50 miles) northwest of Sao Paulo.

    Recovery of the victims’ remains for “identification” has begun and “will continue throughout the night,” Sao Paulo State Governor Tarcisio de Freitas told reporters at the scene.

    President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva declared three days of mourning.

    Voepass said it was cooperating with authorities to “determine the causes of the accident,” while giving full assistance to families of the victims on flight 2283.

    The plane, a twin-engine turboprop, took off “without any flight restrictions, with all its systems operational,” the company said.

    Brazil’s CENIPA aviation accident agency has launched an investigation.

    ATR, a Franco-Italian aircraft maker and Airbus subsidiary, said its experts were working to help investigators.

    Truck driver Martins Barbosa, 49, was working when he learned of the plane crash, which occurred 150 meters (500 feet) from his home.

    “I thought it might have fallen on my house, with my son inside,” he told AFP, adding he felt despondent before learning his family was okay.

    Nathalie Cicari, who lives near the crash site, told CNN Brasil the impact was “terrifying.”

    “I was having lunch, I heard a very loud noise very close by,” she said, describing the sound as drone-like but “much louder.”

    “I went out on the balcony and saw the plane spinning. Within seconds, I realized that it was not a normal movement for a plane.”

    Cicari was not hurt but had to evacuate her house, which was filled with black smoke from the crash.

    “I arrived at the scene and saw many bodies on the ground — many of them,” another witness, Ricardo Rodrigues, told local Band News.

    Firefighters, military police and state civil defense were deployed at the scene.

    Military police told local media the accident had not caused any casualties on the ground, and that the fire sparked by the crash had been brought under control.

    The plane’s black box “has already been found, apparently preserved,” Sao Paulo state security official Guilherme Derrite told reporters at the scene.

    The doomed plane recorded its first flight in April 2010, according to the website planespotters.net.

    Air safety has improved dramatically in recent decades, with deadly passenger plane crashes becoming ever-more rare worldwide, though more frequent in developing nations.

    Excluding Friday’s crash, CENIPA data shows Brazil has recorded 108 aircraft accidents so far this year, resulting in 49 deaths. Over the last ten years, 746 people have died in 1,665 accidents in the country.

    In January 2023, another ATR 72 operated by Yeti Airlines crashed after stalling in Nepal, killing all 72 on board.

    Nepalese authorities attributed the incident to pilot error.

  • US approves aid to Israeli military unit accused of killing Palestinians

    US approves aid to Israeli military unit accused of killing Palestinians

    America defends giving aid to an army unit involved in the killing of a Palestinian-American by saying Israel had already taken remedial action.

    Omar Assad, 78, a grocer who spent most of his adult life in Milwaukee, was on a return visit to the West Bank in January 2022 when he was handcuffed, gagged and blindfolded, dying after lying on the ground for more than an hour on a cold winter night.

    The incident was linked to the Israeli army’s Netzah Yehuda, a unit founded in 1999 to encourage recruits from the ultra-Orthodox community, which is largely exempt from compulsory military service.

    A State Department panel decided against imposing sanctions on the unit after being presented with information by the government of Israel, which has vocally opposed action against its military amid the ongoing war with Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

    “After thoroughly reviewing that information, we have determined that violations by this unit have also been effectively remediated,” State Department spokesman Vedant Patel said.

    “This unit can continue receiving security assistance from the United States of America,” he said.

    A US official said that two soldiers involved in the incident, while not ultimately prosecuted, were removed from combat positions and have left the military.

    The military has also taken steps “to avoid a recurrence of incidents,” including enhanced screening of recruits and a two-week educational seminar specifically for the unit.

    Experts say that Netzah Yehuda has mostly drawn ultra-Orthodox youths who see the military as a way to integrate into Israeli society. Still, it has also attracted fervent nationalists from the West Bank.

    The West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, is home to three million Palestinians alongside some 490,000 Israelis living in settlements considered illegal under international law.

    The army concluded that Assad’s death was the result of “a moral failure and poor decision-making on the part of the soldiers.”

    It said Assad “refused to cooperate” when stopped by soldiers in the village of Jiljilya and that soldiers tied his hands and gagged him without checking on him later.

    It was unclear why soldiers stopped Assad. The Palestinian official news agency Wafa said he died from a stress-induced heart attack.

    Additionally, US is all set to give $3.5 billion to Israel to purchase American weapons and military equipment from a $14.1bn supplemental bill approved by Congress in April.

    “On Thursday, August 8 the Department notified Congress of our intent to obligate $3.5bn in FY 2024 Foreign Military Financing using funding provided by the Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act,” said a State Department spokesperson as reported by CNN.